(no title)
hrodriguez | 9 years ago
I'm looking forward to The NY Time's Zeynep Tufekci's real discussion about Operating Systems that spy on us, collect our data and share that data; tracking across the internet; lack of security updates on phones; a tie-in with PRISM (allowing the NSA unfettered access to company databases) and anything else her top-notch "security researchers" turn up.
Maybe she can add a few words about the lack of oversight, transparency and accountability our tech & phone companies enjoy for the privilege of cooperating with certain government agencies. Let's get your "sources" to add a few words about backroom deals that circumvent The Constitution and the laws of this land too. It's a big topic with many players.
Be careful though, Mrs Tufekci. This kind of real news will get you into hot water with your masters.
I'm sure she'll get to it after another hit-piece on Wikileaks for actually bringing this discussion to the table instead of trying to kill it. That is, once she gets over her political biases (which are sprinkled throughout the article) and does some real journalism.
Security and Privacy are issues that need "real attention" and not something that gets tacked on at the end of an article and forgotten.
*edit: word
neilk|9 years ago
1) There's nothing in what she wrote to suggest that she's minimizing the dangers posed by telcos and goverment.
2) She just wrote a whole book about resisting the government using the internet. (https://www.amazon.com/Twitter-Tear-Gas-Fragility-Networked/...). She has a long history of documenting the ways governments and telcos meddle with popular action, in real time, too. (e.g. https://twitter.com/zeynep/status/449896348142555138 , which I just found by Googling "zeynep telco").
I'll restate what the article actually said, since some people seem to have missed it. She writes that Wikileaks characterized Signal and WhatsApp as being useless for secure communication; that this is not the case; and that the media reported this uncritically.
Rather than raise questions about Tufekci, I think it's more important to ask why Wikileaks is now trying to spread FUD about some of the best tools that we have.
schoen|9 years ago
http://technosociology.org/?page_id=1687
In this connection, she's particularly concerned that misreporting the nature of attacks, (edit:) or reporting them without context, will cause people to make bad security decisions. That issue is raised in reporting on these tools just as it was raised in the WhatsApp reporting, and it's the focus of her editorial here.
I don't think Tufekci wants people to refrain from talking about the terrible state of information security in general, or about how we could improve it. (While she also dislikes Wikileaks in general, which is very apparent in this editorial and slightly complicates the point, I don't think she means to suggest that we shouldn't know or talk about these capabilities or how to respond to them.)
drewrv|9 years ago
If this stuff is worth bringing to the table then Wikileaks can bring it to the table with facts, not sensationalism and misinformation.
> That is, once she gets over her political biases (which are sprinkled throughout the article) and does some real journalism.
It says quite clearly at the top of the page: The Opinion Pages, and it even has "contributing op-ed writer" in all caps.
thisnotmyacc|9 years ago
This isn't news because we've known for ages and ages that governments do evil things, known for ages. None of the evils listed are new or that interesting. Nothing to see here.
To me, that is like saying, "come on, it's murder. We've had murder since Cain killed Abel. Wikileaks attempt to expose such an ancient crime isn't news. Now look what Kanye said..."
drewrv|9 years ago
Conflating the two is dangerous, people will stop using Signal if they think it's insecure. She's right to call out Wikileaks for lying about this stuff, and at no point in the article does she imply the governments actions are acceptable either.
woodandsteel|9 years ago
Huh?
norikki|9 years ago
The controlled media will quibble over symantics of a Tweet and ignore the shocking truth that innumerous government agencies can aquire blackmail on anyone they want at any time without even breaking the law; and if they fear a journalist or leaker sufficiently, cause a high speed car or plane crash to get rid of them.
untog|9 years ago
It's an opinion piece. It's literally right there in the title that you should expect someone to be expressing an opinion, not engaging in objective reporting.
gingerrr|9 years ago
drewrv|9 years ago
You're spreading the exact misinformation that the entire article is trying to correct.
ubernostrum|9 years ago
And which masters would those be, Mr. Rodriguez? Perhaps you're unaware of the background, Mr. Rodriguez, but everything I've seen from her and a lot of other people who know and care about security have been laying into mainstream news media for quite a while over their reckless and breathless inaccurate reporting on security and encryption, and pointing out that media outlets are going to get people killed by turning them away from secure options and toward things that major governments can crack and spy on.
But acknowledging that wouldn't let you spout creepy and condescending comments like the one I'm replying to, now would it, Mr. Rodriguez? So I can see why you didn't go there.
brazzledazzle|9 years ago